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Six sustainable communities stories to watch in 2011

Kaid Benfield

Posted December 30, 2010 in Living Sustainably

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Here are some stories that I plan to watch in the coming year:

  • What will become of the federal sustainability partnership?  The HUD-DOT-EPA alliance for smart growth and sustainable communities has represented a significant step forward for the federal government in assisting states and localities in better placemaking.  It took a while for the new partnership to bear tangible fruit, so to speak, but they delivered big-time in 2010, with substantial assistance to a wide range of innovative projects across the country.  Under Secretary Shaun Donovan’s leadership (and that of HUD sustainability chief Shelley Poticha), HUD even promised to adapt location efficiency criteria from LEED-ND (and perhaps elsewhere) for discretionary housing grants.  The problem for 2011, unfortunately, is that these kinds of projects, many delivered immediately prior to the 2010 election, require funding from a new House of Representatives that looks to be increasingly hostile to federal programs and spending.
  • Whither transportation reform?  In 2009, transportation reform advocacy coalesced into a coordinated movement, supported by millions of dollars of philanthropic funding.  T-REX light rail in Denver (via Florda DOT)With the nation’s omnibus federal transportation law expiring, popular transit projects supported by stimulus legislation, the federal transportation trust fund dwindling and in need of a new concept, and Democrats theoretically in control of Congress, the stars seemed aligned for the biggest overhaul of federal infrastructure spending since ISTEA in 1991. 

But the collapse of the Democratic Congress, along with public backlash against federal spending, have dealt a serious blow to the once-promising prospects for reform.  Now reform-minded activists may be forced to fight merely to hold on to federal planning requirements, support for transit, and environmental programs as they exist, and to the extent reform is possible at all it may be viable only in a few regions via state and local law.  How and where will reform succeed, if it does?

  • High speed rail, dead or alive?  The US is so far behind the rest of the developed world in the capability of our railway system that it’s embarrassing.  There may be an exception in the Northeast, where the Acela Express whisks passengers between New York, Washington and Boston with amazing efficiency, reliability and comfort.  I love the Acela and use it all the time.  But why can’t I do the same from Atlanta to Raleigh, San Francisco to LA, Orlando to Tampa, or Chicago to Milwaukee and Madison? 

t-shirt reaction to governor's decision (courtesy of Stephen Filmanowicz)One reason is that world-class rail systems require national subsidies, and a substantial part of political America hates the whole idea of subsidy (unless the subsidies are for natural resources extraction, such as clearcutting forests, of course, or fighting endless wars in distant lands).  When the Obama administration took office, there was new hope for high speed rail, and some concepts even earned support from federal stimulus funds.  But now we see the governor of Wisconsin actually giving money back to the treasury rather than use it to study rail improvements in his state.  Will high speed rail's glimmer of hope prove to be merited, or was it a mirage?   

  • What will we learn from the 2010 census?  Data from the latest decennial census began to emerge in late December 2010.  Most of the initial publicity - at least in and around Washington - has focused on the relative growth of Sun Belt states, shifting more seats in the US House of Representatives to traditionally Republican states.  There has been an analysis showing that median incomes of central-city residents have risen relative to their suburban counterparts.  DC's downtown is bustling (2010 FK Benfield)And we know that central-city Washington, DC (treated as a state in the census) grew five percent in the last ten years after decades of decline.  (DC citizens’ representation in the House, however, will remain at zero, just as in the Senate.) 

But the really interesting findings will emerge when the analysts have finer-grain data to explore, and time to do so:  To what extent will (or won’t) the data confirm that the share of metropolitan growth claimed by outer suburbs is declining?  That central cities are growing?  That families with school-age children (the sweet spot of the market for single-family suburban homes) comprise a declining share of the population?  That there have been shifts in the shares of commuting travel claimed by walking, driving alone, carpooling, transit, cycling, and so on?  That there are different patterns in different locations or types of locations?  All of the above and more will suggest corresponding changes in the built environment.

  • Are outer ‘burbs really done?  Apart from what we learn from the census, what will we learn from the market?  DC area home prices going down on the fringe, up or stable in the core (map by FK Benfield)Ever since gas prices began to go up and the housing bubble burst, we have seen outer suburban housing and commercial rents decline in value and suffer disproportionate numbers of foreclosures while those in central cities and inner suburbs have either held their values or suffered smaller losses.  Now the economy is showing signs of recovery; will these trends continue, or dissipate?
  • Will cities be reshaped by changes in technology?  Only dinosaurs like myself actually buy music CDs anymore and, when we do, chances are we order online; everyone else downloads.  There’s hardly a bricks-and-mortar music store left, and bookstores are hanging by a thread.  The buildings that used to house them are now empty, some looming ghost-like only a couple of blocks from my downtown office.  Likewise movie theatres.  My wife works for a large federal agency with an aggressive telecommuting program, and one result (counter to the market trends noted above) has been that employees no longer feel a need to live within commuting distance; it’s becoming common for them to move 50, 100 or even 200 miles away from work.  vacant bookstore, NYC (by: William Avery Hudson, creative commons license)NRDC’s own DC office is moving to a space that will be green and very nice but also relatively smaller on a per-person basis than what we enjoy now.  Colleagues routinely call in to meetings rather than attend face-to-face. 

When I read Richard Florida or Chris Leinberger I get encouraged again, but there’s part of me that wonders to what extent cities as we have known them will continue to have a reason to be.  It certainly seems unlikely that cities will have all of the same reasons to exist that have supported them for centuries.  Personal travel via automobiles eventually led to sprawl; what changes in land use will technology bring?

Finally, this one isn’t a story but a resolution on my part: I resolve never again to use the ridiculously overexposed and ambiguous word “vibrant” in this blog to describe neighborhoods, downtowns, or new developments.  If I slip up, I’m counting on you to call me on it.

Move your cursor over the images for credit information.

Kaid Benfield writes (almost) daily about community, development, and the environment.  For more posts, see his blog's home page.

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Comments

John DoughDec 30 2010 11:03 PM

High speed rail, dead or alive?

Dead.

Cause of death: implosion.

Gary WollenhauptDec 31 2010 11:53 AM

Caid,
To build on your comments, here's some trends that will play a role in the green home arena for 2011: http://bit.ly/eH3Btx

It's interesting to look at the history of urban/interurban rail in this country. We had a decent network at one time, but the tracks have been torn up and the land put to other uses. I know of many small towns in Kentucky and Ohio where I'ved lived that were well connected by rail in the early 20th century. I'm a car nut myself, but I would gladly support more government investment in passenger rail in this country.

Tim RoweJan 1 2011 09:04 AM

Without a massive infusion of capital dollars, high-speed rail will remain a 'wish' of those who think that this mode is necessary to achieve world-class status for transportation in the US. And it is very doubtful the current political climate will permat that. The existing mass transit systems that were preserved when the private industry abandoned them in the 1960's were kept alive by the investment of huge amoungs of federal capital and operating dollars. Even with this, these systems have not attracted riders to the extent that they are viable or sustainable.

Until recently, the US transportation system was considered world class with most developing nations envying the American lifestyle that fostered low-occupancy, private auto transport. For all the talk about high-speed rail in Asia and Europe, the market for automobiles and the capacity to supply them has never been greater as this is what the people desire: a flashy new car to drive themselves. China's polution problems are not being resolved by high-speed rail systems.

The world is on the verge of solving the commuting and most transportation 'problems' by very simply removing the need to commute and travel. It is not a coincidence that the internet is called a 'super-highway.' Building broadband out and providing universal access is the solution to many of our economic and transportation issues. Work can be done from home and almost every product and service can be delivered to the home.

If we had people with vision in leadership roles instead of idealogues who wish to 'change' America into something similar to failed societies overseas, we might have enlightened measures that would solve problems, not celebrate and continue them. Spain invested in 'green' jobs and high-speed rail and the result is near bankruptcy: fewer jobs altogether, lower paying jobs and sno energy independence. Yes, why don't we mimic that model?

PaytonJan 1 2011 02:30 PM

Thanks for the shout-out, Kaid, even if I personally *do* like vibrant neighborhoods. (Although out here in California, vibrating is almost always a bad thing!)

Tim, I see no factual basis behind at least two of your key assertions:
1. "the market for automobiles and the capacity to supply them has never been greater"
If that were true, then why did the US taxpayers just pay to painfully remove a huge chunk of auto-making capacity in the US?

2. "China's polution problems are not being resolved by high-speed rail systems."
As far as China goes, its economy is growing so fast that there is little scope to nominally reduce pollution -- but high-speed rail and other green technologies reduce pollution's growth. Similarly, the US economy and US travel demand (really!) are continuing to grow, and there is little scope to increase intercity highway or air capacity.

Many countries that invested in rail and green jobs are doing well right now -- off the top of my head, Sweden, Germany, China, and Singapore. I would hazard that your refusal to see these successes, and instead focus on unrelated failures (Spain is sorting through the aftermath of a fantastically huge housing bubble), is rather characteristic of an ideologue.

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